Wednesday, August 26, 2015

Here is a good experiment in which I show how even if 1 cm sized particles would clump together in outer space that they would be torn to shreds by a slow moving particle. Given most particles in outer space are travelling many tens of thousands of miles an hour.

What do you think of this presentation? Is it possible that stellar evolution is planet formation itself? Is it possible that to form all the chemicals naturally occurring on Earth that it would require the heat and gravitational energy of a star?

Monday, August 24, 2015

I loved your science videos as a kid. When the teacher rolled out the TV and we got to watch you do science experiments, that was definitely a highlight of my middle school years.

Of course, since then I've always been interested in science, and now I have made a major discovery of my own. It has to do with planets. Well, without further delay, I present the understanding of how a planet is formed.

A biochemistry graduate student sent me a very nice letter telling me to keep up the good work. I appreciate that. It is always nice to see minds opened to new possibility. I like showing people the light, because as I boy I was always kept in the dark. Now I have the power.

Friday, August 21, 2015

I think the most advanced lesson yet, I'm currently learning concerning theory development, is the compassion part. I already have the courage thing down pat, now I must have compassion for the lost souls in establishment astrophysics/astronomy.

I have to treat them with lots of compassion. How? I currently have no idea, but it is a task that needs to be done. A series of lessons more powerful than anything school can offer. It is essential for me to become a fully actualized human being, and to show other human beings where we are going as a species.

We have to evolve to great heights via compassion before we leave for other solar systems. I would hate to have our "leaders" do what they do best and subjugate entire species on other worlds just for our ends/means. It would be worse than Oppenheimer's saying that he has become death, destroyer of worlds.

I guess there is so much more to write if I were to really spend time on this little post. I guess the first real time I learned any sort of "compassion" type lesson was when one of my mother's ex's use to talk to me about his time in Vietnam. He told me of the time one of the VC's ran up behind him and pointed and yelled at him with an AK-47, and Doc (that's what they called him) who was bringing up the rear of the patrol did the only thing he knew to do. He had pulled out his side arm and shot the man in the face. My guess is that the VC with the AK-47 didn't have any rounds, or else Doc would have been shot. He told me how he came back to the platoon, told the platoon leader what happened and got really sick to his stomach. He began puking and began to have cold sweats for the next few weeks every night.

Doc told me stories like that, really intense real stories which outlined his experiences, as well as some stories of when he was a homicide detective. He told me to be compassionate towards human beings, to not be so rough and violent, to really GET where they were coming from and try your best to ease their suffering granted you had the power to do so.

Now, I'm not all about really hippy ideals like, oh, we have to save the world and all that stuff, I'm talking about REAL compassion. Like, spending time with older people who are in pain, and need company. People who realize that death is on their door and being there for them. Or even in my case understanding that there are young men/women who are lost and confused as to which direction to take in understanding the stars and where we are going as a species. We have to be more compassionate towards them, to gently know that their professors albeit well-intentioned will not inform them of how lost they really are. Breaking that type of news to any young women/man who aspires to study the stars, well, it is extremely emotionally charged to realize we have been led astray in multiple avenues.

Bringing us out of the darkness is a responsibility I have been given. Even if it is just in one thing, one idea. I think treating those who disagree with this one idea will take a considerable amount of understanding and compassion, because many just don't know any better. Approaching them at the ground floor will be required, not being airy, haughty and conceited as are most scientists these days. I have to stay away from the airy, haughty and conceited nature of most intellectuals, and foster an attitude of being solid, integrity driven, down to Earth and compassionate as I share this understanding. That is the only way. I have to rise above the hate and fear.

Tuesday, August 18, 2015

The process of theory development and the trial by fire are helping to shape who I am as a human being/man/natural philosopher. In that order. I'm really starting to understand what it means to be human, to mature as the man I'm suppose to be and to reason as effectively as any natural philosopher can.

It feels very weird, I'm not use to it. That being said, I will try my best to relay these experiences to others who wish to follow the paths less taken as I am, as well as creating new paths. As well, I'm finding that the concept of "science" is nothing compared to the actual process of becoming a great human being. I'm lucky to have been given the opportunities/insight to carry out the process that I dreamed of as a child, becoming a great human being, a leader and a compassionate soul.

I'm reading every single astronomy/astrophysics book I can get my hands on. Turns out the fields have always had more discoveries to be made. Now I am learning about radio frequency resonances and Mr. Hertz. Next I have to fully examine the processes behind particle accelerators and their history, as well as tokomaks (and their history which should be full of assumptions, we all know where assumptions lead.).